Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Supertramp Available Now
For me, Crime of the Century worked like a gateway drug to get me addicted to the amazing soundscapes found on so many Prog Rock and Art Rock recordings, although I didn’t know what the termArt Rock meant or whether it even existed yet.
I just knew I loved Supertramp’s music. Both Crime and Crisis? What Crisis? were in heavy rotation in the apartment I lived in three blocks from the beach in the mid-70s.
The first Supertramp album I bought on audiophile vinyl would have been the Mobile Fidelity pressing of Crime of the Century which came out in 1978.
It was that label’s first rock release and it showed me the kind of Big Rock Sound I didn’t think was possible for two speakers to produce. In my mind it sounded to me like live music at a concert. I had simply never heard anything like it.
That was partly because I had upgraded to some very big speakers and some awesomely expensive tube gear in 1976, just a couple of years earlier.
When I threw that super Hi-Fi Audiophile pressing on the turntable and turned the volume up good and loud, I thought there could be no question that finally, after all these years and after so many different stereo systems, I had reached the pinnacle of home audio. The sound just could not get any better.
By 1978, Crisis? What Crisis and Even in the Quietest Moments had already come out, and though you couldn’t buy either of those albums on a super-duper disc from Mofi, there was a Half-Speed of Crisis which, I have to admit, sounded great to me at the time and well after it should have. (I don’t know what I thought of the Sweet Thunder pressing of EITQM, but I know what I think now: it sucks.)
I became an even bigger fan of Crisis than I had been of COTC, if you can believe such a thing. (None of my friends could.)
Since Crime… is one of those albums that I still listen to regularly, I can say with confidence that it is the better album by a small margin, and one that would come with me to my desert island even if I were limited to as few as ten titles — that’s how good it is.
And I owe a debt of gratitude to a label that comes in for a lot of criticism on this blog, the one that took Supertramp’s best album and made it a Demo Disc the likes of which I had never heard before, Mobile Fidelity.








